Capital Formation
What does Yank-a-Bank Provision mean in sponsor-led private capital?
Yank-a-Bank Provision is important because it affects financing controls and should be tied to a real sponsor workflow, not just used as jargon.1,2
Keep exploring
Yank-a-Bank Provision refers to yank-a-Bank Provision is a legal term capital formation teams and lenders use inside debt negotiation, covenant setting, funding conditions, collateral review, and closing funds flow when the detail is too important to leave as informal context. The important point is not the label itself, but the workflow it controls. Sponsors should connect Yank-a-Bank Provision to the relevant document, model, investor notice, approval, or reporting record before relying on it in a live deal. A strong operating record also names the owner, the current status, the affected stakeholders, and the next review trigger so the concept can survive diligence, reporting, and later investor questions.1,2
Archstone
Operate your fund without a back office.
Related glossary terms
Related comparisons
Accordion Feature vs Incremental Facility
Accordion Feature and Incremental Facility are related private capital concepts, but they answer different operating questions. Accordion Feature belongs closer to financing controls, while Incremental Facility belongs closer to financing controls.
Aggregator Vehicle vs Incremental Facility
Aggregator Vehicle and Incremental Facility are related private capital concepts, but they answer different operating questions. Aggregator Vehicle belongs closer to advanced vehicle design, while Incremental Facility belongs closer to financing controls.
Capital Formation vs Capital Stack
Capital formation is the process of assembling capital. The capital stack is the resulting structure. For sponsors, the decision affects deal financing, reporting cadence, and who owns execution risk.
Sources & References
- 1.U.S. Securities and Exchange CommissionStarting a Private FundSEC(Private fund structure, capital call, adviser, and operating context.)primary · regulatory-context · capital-formation
- 2.U.S. Small Business AdministrationLoansSBA(Small business loan and acquisition financing context.)primary · market-context · capital-formation